Redeeming Mathematics: A God-Centered Approach
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About this ebook
Vern S. Poythress
Vern S. Poythress (PhD, Harvard University; ThD, University of Stellenbosch) is Distinguished Professor of New Testament, Biblical Interpretation, and Systematic Theology at Westminster Theological Seminary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he has taught for four decades. In addition to earning six academic degrees, he is the author of numerous books and articles on biblical interpretation, language, and science.
Read more from Vern S. Poythress
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Reviews for Redeeming Mathematics
16 ratings1 review
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The first part of this books starts out as a Van Tillian presuppositional approach to how we know things. Poythress' first chapter needed a little help. He says he's not claiming some type of pantheistic system but an initial reading seems to suggest that. It wasn't after another slow read through that I understood that Poythress was saying (that ONLY true natural laws reflect God's characteristics). After that, I thought this book might have some promise.
Where the book fails is Poythress' understanding on not only Genesis 1 but especially the Flood. While his understanding on Genesis 1 doesn't topple the first half of his book, he builds a week argument for a local Flood. However, he doesn't interact with some of the most basic arguments against his position.
The book then splits at Chapter 11 and any momentum (other than using the first three chapters) takes a halt to this new line of thinking. The main thrust of his argument is that not only can Christians do work but the Christian worldview is necessary to do science. And while there are a few gems throughout the remainder of the book, it really falls short on content. He makes his case fine but he will fail to define his terms well enough or fail to deal with an obvious objection or sometimes he just won't be clear enough on his position. Poythress' intelligence is without question and it shows in the later sections, his philosophy can be shakey at times.
The last quarter of the book doesn't really add much to his thesis. It just seems to be, look how cool nature is - it shows the beauty of God's design. All those topics are interesting and can be written about well and purposefully, however, they don't really belong here and especially with very little philosophical or theological implications stated. "It's pretty" doesn't really work well with epistemology.
I would not be willing to recommend this to people who are wanting to know more on the topic. There are other books that have done it better, even from a more scientific approach and even a better Reformed epistemology approach. I would, also, not be picking this book up again to reference again. It's not all bad by any means. There are just some sloppy points and the few gems are not worth the effort. Final Grade - D
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Redeeming Mathematics - Vern S. Poythress
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"Redeeming Mathematics is a valuable addition the growing literature on the relationship between mathematics and Christian belief. Poythress’s treatment of three distinct dimensions of mathematics—as transcendent abstract truths, as part of the physical world, and as comprehensible to human beings—is a unique and helpful addition to the conversation on this relationship. The book is accessible to nonspecialists, but even those who are well-versed in these matters will find much to interest and challenge them."
James Bradley, Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, Calvin College; author, Mathematics Through the Eyes of Faith; Editor, Journal of the Association of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences
Other Crossway Books by Vern S. Poythress
Chance and the Sovereignty of God: A God-Centered Approach to Probability and Random Events
In the Beginning Was the Word: Language—A God-Centered Approach
Inerrancy and the Gospels: A God-Centered Approach to the Challenges of Harmonization
Inerrancy and Worldview: Answering Modern Challenges to the Bible
Logic: A God-Centered Approach to the Foundation of Western Thought
Redeeming Philosophy: A God-Centered Approach to the Big Questions
Redeeming Science: A God-Centered Approach
Redeeming Sociology: A God-Centered Approach
Redeeming
Mathematics
A God-Centered Approach
Vern S. Poythress
Redeeming Mathematics: A God-Centered Approach
Copyright © 2015 by Vern S. Poythress
Published by Crossway
1300 Crescent Street
Wheaton, Illinois 60187
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, except as provided for by USA copyright law.
Cover design: Matt Naylor
First printing 2015
Printed in the United States of America
Scripture quotations are from the ESV® Bible (The Holy Bible, English Standard Version®), copyright © 2001 by Crossway. 2011 Text Edition. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
All emphases in Scripture quotations have been added by the author.
Trade paperback ISBN: 978-1-4335-4110-0
ePub ISBN: 978-1-4335-4113-1
PDF ISBN: 978-1-4335-4111-7
Mobipocket ISBN: 978-1-4335-4112-4
lineLibrary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Poythress, Vern S.
Redeeming mathematics : a God-centered approach / Vern S. Poythress.
1 online resource.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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ISBN 978-1-4335-4111-7 (pdf) – ISBN 978-1-4335-4112-4 (mobi) – ISBN 978-1-4335-4113-1 (epub) – ISBN 978-1-4335-4110-0 (trade paperback)
1. Bible—Evidences, authority, etc. 2. Mathematics—
Religious aspects—Christianity. 3. Mathematics in the
Bible. I. Title.
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Contents
Diagrams and Illustrations
Introduction: Why God?
Part I
Basic Questions
1 God and Mathematics
2 The One and the Many
3 Naturalism
4 The Nature of Numbers
Part II
Our Knowledge of Mathematics
5 Human Capabilities
6 Necessity and Contingency
Part III
Simple Mathematical Structures
7 Addition
8 The Idea of What Is Next
9 Deriving Arithmetic from Succession
10 Multiplication
11 Symmetries
12 Sets
Part IV
Other Kinds of Numbers
13 Division and Fractions
14 Subtraction and Negative Numbers
15 Irrational Numbers
16 Imaginary Numbers
17 Infinity
Part V
Geometry and Higher Mathematics
18 Space and Geometry
19 Higher Mathematics
Conclusion
Supplements
Resources
Appendix A Secular Theories about the Foundations of Mathematics
Appendix B Christian Modifications of Philosophies of Mathematics
Appendix C Deriving Arithmetic
Appendix D Mathematical Induction
Appendix E Elementary Set Theory
Bibliography
General Index
Scripture Index
Diagrams and Illustrations
Diagrams
4.1 Frame’s Three Perspectives on Ethics
4.2 2 + 2 = 4, Illustrated by Sets
4.3 Multiple Relationships
5.1 Frame’s Square on Transcendence and Immanence
5.2 Frame’s Square with Explanations
5.3 Frame’s Square for Numbers
5.4 Frame’s Square for Knowing Numbers
8.1 Genealogical Tree
8.2 Clock Arithmetic
10.1 Area
11.1 Addition Harmony
15.1 Pythagorean Theorem
18.1 X and Y Axes
18.2 Addition within a Coordinate System
D.1 Dots in a Square
D.2 Squares and Differences
Illustrations
11.1 Symmetric Face
11.2 Symmetric Starfish
11.3 Symmetric Cylinder
11.4 Symmetric Honeycomb
13.1 The Hotdog Problem
Introduction
Why God?
Does God have anything to do with mathematics? Many people have never considered the question. It seems to them that the truths of mathematics are just out there.
¹ In their view, mathematics presents us with a world remote from religious questions. Some people think that God exists; others are convinced that he does not; still others would say that they do not know. But all of them might say, It does not matter when we look at mathematics.
I think it does matter. In this book I intend to show why. I am working from the conviction that we should honor and glorify God in all of life: So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God
(1 Cor. 10:31). The expression whatever you do
includes our thinking, and our thinking includes our thinking about mathematics. In addition, I am a follower of Christ, and I acknowledge that Christ is Lord of all.² If he is Lord of all, he is also Lord of mathematics. But what does that mean? We will try to work out the implications.
I am writing primarily to people who follow Christ, who have come to know him as the living Savior and who have put their faith in him. They find out from the Bible that Christ himself teaches that the Old Testament is the word of God, God’s own speech to us in written form (see especially Matt. 5:17–18; 19:4–5; John 10:35). The Old Testament predicts the coming of Christ (see, for example, Isa. 9:6–7; 11:1–5; 53:1–12; Mic. 5:2). It also makes provision for later prophets (Deut. 18:15–22). After Christ completed his work on earth, the New Testament was written with the same authority as the Old Testament. So I am going to draw on the Bible for understanding who God is, and in addition for understanding what mathematics is.³
If you are not yet a follower of Christ, you are still welcome to read. I hope it will be informative for you to learn what are the implications of the Bible for mathematics. But if you are going to appropriate the truth for yourself, you will first of all have to come to terms with Christ. You should ask who he is and what he has to say about you and the way you live your life. I would recommend that you start by reading the part of the Bible consisting in the Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John).
¹Other people think that arithmetic truths are in here,
that is, that they are items of mental furniture. We certainly do have mental concepts concerning mathematics. But, as we shall see later, mathematics ought not to be reduced to this pole of subjective experience.
²I have been encouraged here by Abraham Kuyper, who challenged people to think about the universal lordship of Christ in Lectures on Calvinism: Six Lectures Delivered at Princeton University under Auspices of the L. P. Stone Foundation (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1931). See Vern S. Poythress, Redeeming Philosophy: A God-Centered Approach to the Big Questions (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2014), appendix A.
³For extended discussion of the nature of the Bible, many books are available. See especially John M. Frame, The Doctrine of the Word of God (Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian & Reformed, 2010). For a discussion of the broader set of commitments with which to study the Bible, see Poythress, Redeeming Philosophy; and Vern S. Poythress, Inerrancy and Worldview: Answering Modern Challenges to the Bible (Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2012).
Part I
Basic Questions
1
God and Mathematics
Let us begin with numbers. We can consider a particular case: 2 + 2 = 4. That is true. It was true yesterday. And it always will be true. It is true everywhere in the universe. We do not have to travel out to distant galaxies to check it. Why not? We just know. Why do we have this conviction? Is it not strange? What is it about 2 + 2 = 4 that results in this conviction about its universal truth?¹
All Times and All Places
2 + 2 = 4 is true at all times and at all places.² We have classic terms to describe this situation: the truth is omnipresent (present at all places) and eternal (there at all times). The truth 2 + 2 = 4 has these two characteristics or attributes that are classically attributed to God. So is God in our picture, already at this point? We will see.
Technically, God’s eternity is usually conceived of as being above
or beyond
time. But words like above
and beyond
are metaphorical and point to mysteries. There is, in fact, an analogous mystery with respect to 2 + 2 = 4. If 2 + 2 = 4 is universally true, is it not in some sense beyond
the particularities of any one place or time?
Moreover, the Bible indicates that God is not only above
time in the sense of not being subject to the limitations of finite creaturely experience of time, but is in
time in the sense of acting in time and interacting with his creatures.³ Similarly, 2 + 2 = 4 is above
time in its universality, but in
time through its applicability to each particular situation. Two apples plus two more apples is four apples.
Divine Attributes of Arithmetical Truth
The attributes of omnipresence and eternity are only the beginning. On close examination, other divine attributes seem to belong to arithmetical truths.
Consider. If 2 + 2 = 4 holds for all times, we are presupposing that it is the same truth through all times. The truth does not change with time. It is immutable.
Next, 2 + 2 = 4 is at bottom ideational in character. We do not literally see the truth 2 + 2 = 4, but only particular instances to which it applies: two apples plus two apples. The truth that 2 + 2 = 4 is essentially immaterial and invisible, but is known through manifestations. Likewise, God is essentially immaterial and invisible, but is known through his acts in the world.
Next, we have already observed that 2 + 2 = 4 is true. Truthfulness is also an attribute of God.
The Power of Arithmetical Truth
Next, consider the attribute of power. Mathematicians make their formulations to describe properties of numbers. The properties are there before the mathematicians make their formulations. The human mathematical formulation follows the facts and is dependent on them. An arithmetical truth or regularity must hold for a whole series of cases. The mathematician cannot force the issue by inventing a new property, say that 2 + 2 = 5, and then forcing the universe to conform to his formulation. (Of course, the written symbols such as 4 and 5 that denote the numbers could have been chosen differently. And a mathematician can define a new abstract object to have properties that he chooses. But we do not choose
the properties of natural numbers.) Natural numbers conform to arithmetical properties and laws that are already there, laws that are discovered rather than invented. The laws must already be there. 2 + 2 = 4 must actually hold. It must have teeth.
If it is truly universal, it is not violated. Two apples and two apples always make four apples. No event escapes the hold
or dominion of arithmetical laws. The power of these laws is absolute, in fact, infinite. In classical language, the law is omnipotent (all powerful
).
2 + 2 = 4 is both transcendent and immanent. It transcends the creatures of the world by exercising power over them, conforming them to its dictates. It is immanent in that it touches and holds in its dominion even the smallest bits of this world.⁴ 2 + 2 = 4 transcends the galactic clusters and is immanently present in the behavior of the electrons surrounding a beryllium nucleus. Transcendence and immanence are characteristics of God.
The Personal Character of Law
Many agnostics and atheists by this time will be looking for a way of escape. It seems that the key concept of arithmetical truth is beginning to look suspiciously like the biblical idea of God. The most obvious escape, and the one that has rescued many from spiritual discomfort, is to deny that arithmetical truth is personal. It is just there as an impersonal something.
Throughout the ages people have tried such routes. They have constructed idols, substitutes for God. In ancient times, the idols often had the form of statues representing a god—Poseidon, the god of the sea, or Mars, the god of war. Nowadays in the Western world we are more sophisticated. Idols now take the form of mental constructions of a god or a God-substitute. Money and pleasure can become idols. So can humanity
or nature
when it receives a person’s ultimate allegiance. Scientific law,
when it is viewed as impersonal, becomes another God-substitute. Arithmetical truth, as a particular kind of scientific law, is also viewed as impersonal. In both ancient times and today, idols conform to the imagination of the one who makes them. Idols have enough similarities to the true God to be plausible, but differ so as to allow us comfort and the satisfaction of manipulating the substitutes that we construct.
In fact, however, a close look at 2 + 2 = 4 shows that this escape route is not really plausible. Law implies a law-giver. Someone must think the law and enforce it, if it is to be effective. But if some people resist this direct move to personality, we may move more indirectly.
Scientists and mathematicians in practice believe passionately in the rationality of scientific laws and arithmetical laws. We are not dealing with something totally irrational, unaccountable, and unanalyzable, but with lawfulness that in some sense is accessible to human understanding. Rationality is a sine qua non for scientific law. But, as we know, rationality belongs to persons, not to rocks, trees, and subpersonal creatures. If the law is rational, as mathematicians assume it is, then it is also personal.
Scientists and mathematicians also assume that laws can be articulated, expressed, communicated, and understood through human language. Mathematical work includes not only rational thought but symbolic communication. Now, the original law, the law 2 + 2 = 4 that is out there,
is not known to be written or uttered in a human language. But it must be expressible in language in our secondary description. It must be translatable into not only one but many human languages. We may explain the meaning of the symbols and the significance and application of 2 + 2 = 4 through clauses, phrases, explanatory paragraphs, and contextual explanations in human language.
Arithmetical laws are clearly like human utterances in their ability to be grammatically articulated, paraphrased, translated, and illustrated.⁵ Law is utterance-like, language-like. And the complexity of utterances that we find among mathematicians, as well as among human beings in general, is not duplicated in the animal world.⁶ Language is one of the defining characteristics that separates man from animals. Language, like rationality, belongs to persons. It follows that arithmetical laws are in essence personal.⁷
The Incomprehensibility of Law
In addition, law is both knowable and incomprehensible in the theological sense. That is, we know arithmetical truths, but in the midst of this knowledge there remain unfathomed depths and unanswered questions about the very areas where we know the most. Why does 2 + 2 = 4 hold everywhere?
The knowability of laws is closely related to their rationality and their immanence, displayed in the accessibility of effects. We experience incomprehensibility in the fact that the increase of mathematical understanding only leads to ever deeper questions: How can this be?
and Why this law rather than many other ways that the human mind can imagine?
The profundity and mystery in mathematical discoveries can only produce awe—yes, worship—if we have not blunted our perception with hubris (Isa. 6:9–10).
Are We Divinizing Nature?
But now we must consider an objection. By claiming that arithmetical laws have divine attributes, are we divinizing nature? That is, are we taking something out of the created world and falsely claiming that it is divine? Are not arithmetical laws a part of the created world? Should we not classify them as creature rather than Creator?⁸
I suspect that the specificity of arithmetical laws, their obvious reference to the created world, has become the occasion for many of us to infer that these laws are a part of the created world. But such an inference is clearly invalid. The speech describing a butterfly is not